Proper IT thermal management most certainly remains a critical priority. Precision air conditioning — or data center-grade cooling systems — are still very much needed, even if precise (within 1 or 2 degrees) temperature and humidity set points are no longer mandatory. In part, this is because even while the spectrum of allowable temperatures in IT space has expanded, so too has the amount of heat generated by the increasingly sophisticated servers needed to support today’s power- and data-intensive applications, including Internet of Things (IoT), artificial intelligence (AI), and others. And properly managing that heat is the key to ensuring IT equipment performs at optimal levels.
Furthermore, the consequences for exceeding recommended heat thresholds are just as serious as they ever were. Excessive heat can take a toll on equipment, leading to component failures or sometimes complete system shutdown, and it can all happen in a matter of minutes. IT equipment failures often snowball into unplanned downtime for a business, which comes at a staggeringly high cost that exceeds the cost of equipment damage and includes lost revenue opportunity, customer service disruption, and reputational damage that can persist long after the equipment is repaired, and the business is back up and running.
To help prevent potentially disastrous threats to business-critical continuity, precision air conditioning is still very much a necessity in data center and IT spaces.
Precision cooling is air conditioning specifically designed for IT equipment in places like data centers and computer rooms.
Precision AC monitoring system keeps the balance of temperature and humidity level by controlling the temperature and humidity of the PAC. Which in end increases the life of equipment